What is much more intriguing and tantalizing is actually the subtitle:
African perspectives of university community engagement in secondary cities
The subtitle raises several questions: What are "African perspectives of university community engagement"? What actually is "university community engagement" to begin with? What modalities of 'engagement' are there? Who engages with whom or what? To what end? What aspect of "university" is involved in this engagement? How does it relate to the core functions of a university, which are teaching and learning, and research? What is meant by community in this phrase Does 'community' extend to businesses, government, public sector organisations, community-based organisations, or what exactly? Conceptually as well as practically, what is involved in these notions?And what are 'secondary cities'? Is there something particularly different and noteworthy about such engagement in so-called secondary cities? What is signaled by this prominent reference to locality? How does it relate to the idea of 'college towns' and the concept of 'anchor institutions' and 'anchoring'?
Today the book was launched in the Higher Education and Development Seminar at the University of the Free State, and on Friday it will be launched at Sol Plaatje University in Kimberley.